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tv   CNN Newsroom  CNN  February 16, 2013 5:00pm-6:00pm EST

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way. that's going to wrap things up for "sgmd." follow me on twitter at dr. sanjay gupta. up next, a check of your top stories making news right now. it is the story that people cannot stop talking about. a meteor strike in russia that injured hundreds and scared the masses. today cnn tries to get to the site where one of the meteor's pieces supposedly landed. i'm don lemon. that story in less than 90 seconds. first we want to get you up to speed on the stories making headlines this hour. a truck bomb killed at least 78 people today in a marketplace in central pakistan. nearly 200 others were wounded. police say the explosives were packed in a water tanker and detonated by remote control. the attack is just the latest in an ongoing campaign in violence against shiite muslims in the region, which is overwhelmingly sunni.
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at the vatican, cardinals could mean sooner than expected to begin the process of choosing a new pope. the conclave can start as soon as all 117 cardinals are in rome. when benedict xvi steps down at the end of the month, he is going to his summer residence while work is finished on his new home inside the vatican compound. in detroit, icy roads and snowy squalls have led to the multicar pileups across that area. according to affiliate wxyz, the 30-vehicle accident shut down part of the southbound interstate 75. several people were treated at hospitals for their injuries. an idaho man could face a year in jail for smacking a crying child on a recent delta flight. he was sitting next to a little boy and his mother from an minneapolis to atlanta flight. the boy began to cry and according to documents, huntley used the n-word and reached over and slapped the boy. the company he works for says he has been suspended pending an
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investigation. today is clean-up day in russia. these guys are replacing windows and sweeping up broken glass just like people all over a huge part of southern russia are doing, just about every glass window in an area covering 80,000 square miles smashed at the same time yesterday. nasa calls this a once in a century event. a meteor, pretty sizeable one, as a matter of fact, screamed out of the sky and slammed to earth. more than 1,000 people were hurt and thousands of buildings damaged. cnn's phil black is in russia. he hit the road today, trying to find the spot where the meteor landed. >> are we're walking on a frozen lake. it's about a 90-minute drive west. we're here because locals say a big fragment from the meteor punched through the ice. and is now sitting at the bottom of the lake.
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[ speaking in russian ] >> that was a very firm no. these police officers said it is prohibited for us to be here, to shoot video here, to try and walk any further. if if part of that meet orrite came down there, where those vehicles are, as locals say it did, the russian authorities don't want us or anyone else to see it. the meteor's final descent through the atmosphere was seen by people all across this region. at this school, students came outside to look at the trail of smoke it left in the sky. one student captured the moment on his phone. what were you thinking? what do you think your friends were thinking? >> firstly, i think it seems to be a terrorist attack. they guessed that it was a
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rocket bomb. >> and then there is the big blast, the sonic boom. [ explosion ] >> my ears have deafened, and everyone fell down like this. and the ground shook a little. it was awful. girls were crying, screaming panic, and crying. >> there are a few isolated examples of really substantial damage caused by this meteor and its shock wave. here at this factory, it is said to have knocked over the brick walls. elsewhere across the city, mostly superficial. glass and window frames and a lot of that is already being cleaned up and repaired. within a week or so, there should be few physical scars left from this city's close encounter with the media. but it is likely to be something
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that people here will be talking about for some time to come. phil black, cnn, russia. >> make sure you stay there. i've got a great guest here, an astronomer will explain just what happened yesterday in russia. and he's got some pieces of space rocks that have made it to earth. it's a fascinating conversation coming up, so make sure you stay tuned. i want to go now to the shocking news that an entire nation still can't believe really the entire world. south africa's national hero locked up in jail, charged with murder. and a surreal angle. a young woman shot dead by pistorius, a reality show she taped did go on television today as scheduled in south africa. the producers of the show say they consulted beforehand. it's one of those celebrity competition shows a well-known model and activist. i want you to listen to these words. it's prophetic, really.
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>> you literally fall in love with jamaica. you fall in love with being in love with love. it's just one love everywhere. >> a sweet taste in my mouth. i don't have any bitterness. i take with me so many amazing memories and things that are in here, that are in here. i love you so much. i love you very, very much. >> interesting, huh? a little context for you. she was talking about leaving and missing the people of jamaica, not her family or loved ones. but it's still a sad final few words. and as for olympic track star oscar pistorius, he has been formally charged with murdering reeva steenkamp and will stay locked up until at least tuesday and a bail hearing is set for them. to sue or not to sue. a decision facing passengers from the carnival "triumph" after surviving the so-called cruise from hell. at least one woman has made her
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choice, filing a lawsuit. the investigation to learn what happened to the "triumph" could take a while. and cnn's susan candiotti has more for us. >> reporter: you can see the "triumph" over my shoulder, way off in the distance, just to give you a sense of scale. that ship is the length of three football fields and has 13 decks in all. a team of investigators for the u.s. coast guard, as well as for the national transportation safety board, are trying to figure out the source of sunday's fire that brought this cruise to a screeching halt. they have a lot of work ahead of them as they try to go into the engine room and figure out where the fire may have started. it might even have been somewhere else. they have to look through all of the systems on board the ship. they've already spent time talking with passengers before they disembark, and went to the far corners of the earth going back home again. but they'll also be examining the procedures that were followed after that fire took place. there is another engine room they could have turned to as an
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alternate source of power. however, investigators are saying that might have been a risky move. >> in this case, they may have been able to restore power, but really the safe thing to do was to tow the vessel back into port rather than try to reenergize a power system that was damaged by fire. >> reporter: investigators will also be examining what's called the voyage data recorder that among other things preserves conversations that took place aboard the ship's bridge. and also stores all the kinds of data about what was happening aboard the ship, as well. we also talked with some of the crew members that went back aboard the ship this day. they tell us they are helping with the clean-up process. the investigation will take quite some time. possibly up to a year before a final report is issued by the bohemian government where the ship is registered. susan candiotti, cnn, in mobile, alabama. unless the president and congress can agree on a new budget plan by the end of the
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his weekly address to reinforce a message he delivered in this week's states of the union address calling for new programs to stimulate the economy. >> we need to launch manufacturing hubs across the country that will transform hard-hit regions into global centers of high-tech jobs and manufacturing. we need to make our tax code more competitive, ending tax breaks for companies that ship jobs overseas and rewarding companies that create jobs here at home. >> in our party's weekly address, marketa roby blamed the president for the billions in spending cuts that could take effect march 1st. >> as the clock is ticking towards his devastating sequester, the president has failed to put forward a plan to prevent it. why? because president obama and senate democrats see his sequester as an opportunity to push through another tax increase. >> she said the president should consider some alternative budget cuts already passed by the republican-led house. florida senator marco rubio
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is headed to the middle east. he left today on a week-long trip that will take him to israel and jordan. he planned meetings with the israeli and palestinian prime ministers, days after they delivered the republican response to president obama's state of the union address. we've all heard about the budget cuts coming march 1st. the dreaded sequester. most of the noise has been about defense cuts. but this goes way beyond that and we'll all feel its impact one way or another. cnn's emily smith looks at one agency bracing for cutbacks. >> reporter: if rhard wood has seen one national park, he's seen them all. or hopes to. how many parks have you been to? >> well, over 200. 250, approximately. >> reporter: with great falls, virginia checked off the list, there are 150 to go. >> the national park service is, you know -- there is nothing like it in the world. >> reporter: the national park service covers more than 84 million acres in had every state but delaware and soon may do so
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with less because of mandatory budget cuts, known as sequestration slated to begin march 1st. >> it looks like the sequester is probably going to happen. >> reporter: john guarder works for a nonprofit group that supports the national parks and he's worried about the looming changes. >> 5% is a lot for the park service. >> reporter: the national park service is preparing to cut $110 million out of its $2.2 billion budget. that could mean shorter park hours, fewer employees, and possible closed camping and hiking areas when there's not enough staff. >> a cut of this magnitude, which would be so damaging to parks over the course of a year, federal spending would save 15 minutes. >> reporter: guarder says the park could lose $1.7 million. the statue of liberty, $779,000. still, one budget expert says the cuts are not too extreme. >> i think almost any organization can sustain a 5% cut in their budget and not have
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it interfere with their basic mission. >> reporter: isabelle sawhill says taxpayers may not mind getting a bit less in service to help control government spending. richard wood agrees in theory. just not here. >> i'm a big national park service fan. so i want them to cut programs that don't matter to me personally. no, i'm -- and i think unfortunately, all of us feel that way. >> emily schmidt joins me from washington. so emily, cutting the parks budget is bad enough. what else is on the chopping block. >> don, it's almost everything you deal with. every day. let's start with the food you eat. the agriculture department predicts meat inspector furloughs, meaning meat and poultry plants which checked down nationwide for up to 15 days. the agriculture department warns that could create a meat poultry and egg shortage, meaning you'll pay more. the fda says 2,100 fewer food safety inspections, more foodborne illness. when you fly, the department of homeland security says expect longer waits, because tsa would
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reduce its workers and the department of education says 86% of school districts wouldn't be able to make up for the loss of sequestration in the 2013-2014 school year. don, cuts could impact programs you don't even know you need yet. fema says the disaster relief fund for severe weather survivors will be cut more than $1 billion. >> goodness. so what are the odds that lawmakers can actually find a way to stop these cuts from taking effect? >> yeah. odds that it could happen? there are some odds that it could happen. they have two weeks left to try to do it. at the same time, it seems like all they're agreeing on at this point is that they think it's pretty bad policy. the problem is at this point they don't agree on how to -- you have seen senate democrats this week calling for a plan that combine taxing millionaires more, reducing defense spending after the war in afghanistan, ending foreign subsidies. they say those things could combine to replace mandatory budget cuts. but congressional republicans say they're not going to support any plan that includes tax increases. so don, these fundamental
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arguments haven't really changed in the more than year that sequestration has been looming. we're just not hearing a lot of optimism from congressional leaders that anything might change now in the next couple weeks. >> all right. emily schmidt, thank you so much. appreciate that. some commercials say low t is robbing men of their manline manliness. researchers say a guy's testosterone takes a hit once he gets married. and another researcher says we've got that backwards. on you? can curlers! tomato basil, potato with bacon... we've got a lot of empty cans. [ male announcer ] progresso. you gotta taste this soup.
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"not tonight, britta. not tonight." [ female announcer ] to nurses everywhere, thank you, from johnson & johnson. after he left his legs in the iraq war, his community helped build him a home. the random act of kindness inspired him. and since 2008, he has helped provide homes to 17 disabled veterans. meet our cnn hero of the week. >> i'm a combat wounded iraq veteran. as i was recovering at walter reed, my community approached me and said they wanted to help build a home for my return. people would come and work on my
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project just because they respected the sacrifice that i had gone through. all veterans have been taught to be responsible for the guy to your left and the guy to your right. other veterans haven't had it as easy as i have, so i sat down with my battle buddy john, and we decided to level the playing field. i'm dale beatty, and it's now my mission to help other veterans get the support and homes they deserve in their communities. there's thousands of veterans right here in our midst. people don't realize the need that's out there. purple heart homes can help any disabled veteran, regardless of their age or war. >> this is the young man why we're all here today. >> just getting the community engaged, to get a ramp built or foreclosed home remodeled or entire house built from the ground up. >> narrow doorways that i couldn't get through.
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i had to crawl in on my hands and knees to have them build a whole new bathroom was unbelievable. >> we want to make their life easier, safer, just better. and their motions in rehab, as well. >> i did three tours in vietnam for 35 years, no one cared. purple heart homes said welcome home. it's great to be home after 40 years. >> regardless of when you serve, we're all the same. they just need to know that somebody does care about them.
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if you watch much tv, you don't have to watch that much, you see it and know it by now. men are not truly manly unless they're bursting with
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testosterone. for men suffering from so-called low t, low testosterone, there are pills and possessions and lotions. and it seems for all where testosterone is held up as a barometer that determines how much a man is really a man. how much of a man you are. well, psychologist wendy walsh's new book is available for preorder on amazon, "the 30 day love detox." wendy, listen. i see these commercials over and over and over. about before we get to this whole low t thing, how much of this is created by the pharmaceutical industry? >> 100% of it. i mean, i think that this belief system is that we have to create some kind of new ailment that people need to get fixed. and i don't think that men are suffering that much. from low t. >> okay. so before we -- men who get married. married men. it says that your testosterone is supposed to lower once you
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get married. is that true? can that happen? >> no. in fact, that's what's exciting about this new research out of simon frazier university in canada. is that lots of research shows that married men tended to have slightly lower testosterone levels than single men. now remember, lower testosterone levels doesn't necessarily mean lower sex drive. it doesn't necessarily mean less chest hair or whatever. it's just, you know, an anomaly about how people are made up. but the thinking was always that once you sort of domesticated a man and had him loading dish washes and changing diapers, somehow his testosterone would lower. but this new research says -- and i love to tell women this, men with slightly lower testosterone are more likely to get married. they have better bonding abilities. they're the good guys. >> because they're not -- anyway. i won't go there. >> exactly. the single men with the higher testosterone may be in multiple relationships, less likely to be
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monogamous, et cetera. and by the way, there's testosterone in women, too. remember. >> if you want to call them relationships. it's relations but not necessarily relationships. and i want to say, you're not a medical doctor but with all of these ads, the dangers of low t, you just said sex drive doesn't have a lot to do with sex drive. doesn't have -- may not have anything to do with sex drive. but it also has something to do with environment, right? >> well, i think we have to understand that there's got to be a much greater definition of manhood and manliness than just verify i willty. the great guys are the good fathers and ones able to keep their genes in evolution's chain for a long time. and that means learning how to be good dads and head of households. we don't see those role models in our media as much. environment does play a role. for instance, in women, where you would sort of waning sex drive around menopause, you would think, now we have the
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advent of the cougar. and one study i read was fascinating, said cougars erupt in you're in a permissive environment where there happen to be young men who are interested and then all of a sudden women's sex drive doesn't wane in their late 40s and 50s. if they live in a smaller town, conservative town, where it would be considered a scandal, there are fewer cougars, so environment does play a role, as well. >> i can't believe you said that. actually, i can. it is you, dr. wendy. but, you know, here's the thing. that's probably why, though, there are all these commercials and all these products to get your testosterone levels up. because really, for a man, i mean, it's a big part about getting up and keeping up. that's really a big part of it for a man. come on. let's be honest. >> it is. but let me tell you this. one-third of men over the age of 50 have some form of erectile dysfunction but they don't all have bad sex lives. what happens, as men age their testosterone may go down, women's goes up. they meet somewhere in the
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middle. they have far more sensuous connections, sex becomes far more than a genital experience and plenty of people are growing closer in later years. that's the good news. >> thank you. dr. wendy. i wish you could see the faces and reactions here in the studio. all men, by the way. >> they don't like me to talk about erections, do they? >> see you, dr. wendy. all right. so -- >> see you tonight. >> see you tonight. on to other news now. experts are now saying the meteor that broke up over russia was so big, it had nearly 30 times the power of hiroshima, the atomic bomb. so how did something that big and that powerful go undetected? we're asking. that's next. when a twinge of bn surprises him. morning starts in high spirits, but there's a growing pain in his lower back. as lines grow longer, his pain continues to linger. but after a long day of helping others, he gets some helpful advice. just two aleve have the strength
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i smiled and squeezed her hand. "not tonight, britta. not tonight." [ female announcer ] to nurses everywhere, thank you, from johnson & johnson. let's see what you got. rv -- covered. why would you pay for a hotel? i never do. motorcycles -- check. atv. i ride those. do you? no. boat. house. hello, dear.
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hello. hello. oh! check it -- [ loud r&b on car radio ] i'm going on break! the more you bundle, the more you save. now, that's progressive. half past the hour. getting you caught up on headlines. an olympic track star in one of the most famous people in south africa, spending this weekend in jail. oscar pistorius won't know until tuesday if he'll even get out on bail. he has been formally charged with the murder of his girlfriend. pistorius is the athlete they call "blade runner" after the prosthetic legs he wears on the track. he broke down sobbing in court yesterday when a south african judge read the murder charge. the head of iraq's spy school was killed today. but there are conflicting reports about his death. local officials say he was killed while confronting two
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suicide bombers who had just killed his two bodyguards. the police say he died when bodyguards killed two bombers, then accidentally set off their explosives by shooting one of their dead bodies. at the vatican, cardinals could meet sooner than expected to begin the process of choosing a new pope. a vatican spokesman says a conclave can can start as soon as all 117 cardinals are in rome. benedi benedict xvi stepped down at the end of the month. fire in the sky over russia, an event that sent thousands of russians staring at the heavens and then running for cover. obviously some very scary moments, a reminder our planet is spinning around in a very unpredictable neighborhood. it left a lot of us wondering, was the sky falling? joining me now is david dundee, astronomer in georgia. thank you for joining us. nasa calls this a meteor, a tiny asteroid.
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you've seen the video, heard the sonic boom. how do you describe this, big, little, what is it? >> well, it's big for a meteor and tiny for an asteroid. the reason that this asteroid may -- or small meteor made such a large impact, if you will, on the russian landscape is that it was traveling at 33,000 miles per hour. and as it decelerated, it's kind of like a swimmer doing a belly flop from a very high diving board into water. but you're traveling a lot faster. that energy has to go somewhere. it went into light that you saw on the street when it was heating up the column of air. >> that's what caused the shock wave and damage? >> yeah, the shock wave is what happened. and the injuries where it happened, because people naturally went to their window, and saw this bright light, because light travels faster than sound. and then the sound arrived, and shattered the windows when everybody was looking out their window. >> is there a way to warn or predict about the next meteor or
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next close encounter? >> best radar, even the best military radar, we have a very difficult time detecting something 50 feet or less across. this is a kind of an unpredictable event. unlike the asteroid that passed the earth yesterday, we had plenty of warning and knew where it was coming and where it was going. >> yeah. yesterday i was talking to some colleagues and they were like, where should we go, down in the basement? and i said i think we're going to be fine. it appears that russia seems to be the bulls-eye for these meteors. 1908, 1947 and yesterday. why is that? >> well, russia geographically is, what, six times across -- and so you have a big target. and this actually, this fragment i have with me today is from the impact that happened in 1947. and that is mostly -- you can tell, pretty heavy. and it's made of mostly iron and nickle. that's different from what happened yesterday. that was mostly a stony meter
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orrite as best we can tell. this one -- most did not break up in the atmosphere. but actually came down and made crateters in 1947. so 1903 is a similar event because it was more of an air burst that wiped out the trees in siberia. >> i'm surprised how heavy this is for its size. you said it's mostly iron. >> one of the tell tale signs. you have a meet orrite and not a meteor-wrong. >> funny. with the bursts yesterday, how much of a danger was the planet in? >> globally, very little. the meteor, if it -- if it came over a more populated area, obviously more injuries. but it's not like a climate changer, like the one that hit in 65 million years ago that made the demise of the dinosaurs possible. but certainly the asteroid that passed us yesterday, if that had hit, it would have wiped out 800
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miles worth of real estate very quickly. >> goodness. are the two events connected? >> no. and we know that for sure. >> just a coincidence. >> a lot of people have asked that. but you've got to know that the two events were separated by about 14 hours. the earth is hurting around the sun, and we have a lot of real estate going around the sun so we're in a different place. so these two items were not connected in any way. just cosmic connection. cosmic coincidence, i should say. >> good stuff. can i keep this? >> uh, no. >> let's see if you can get it back. thank you, david. appreciate it. >> my pleasure. >> any time. moving on now. police promised $1 million to anyone who helped them catch accused cop killer christopher do dorner, but despite help from the public, it's possible no one will get the money.
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southern california.
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an autopsy confirms rogue ex cop christopher dorner died of a single bullet to the head. it's not clear who fired the shot. but evidence suggests, it was self-inflicted. investigators are still trying -- tying up many loose ends. >> don, the manhunt for christopher dorner is now over. but there are still many lingering questions that have been left unanswered. one is, what happens to the million-dollar reward money put forth by the city of los angeles for information leading to the arrest and conviction of christopher dorner? as it stands right now, no one is expected to receive that money. not even the couple that were tied up by christopher dorner, or the man he carjacked. both called police and tipped authorities off to his whereabouts. and yet still another question looming is how much of a role did authorities play in the death of dorner? and did they intentionally set fire to the cabin where dorner engaged police in a shootout? at a press conference friday, the san bernardino county sheriff's department reiterated, they did not mean to set the fire and also talked about how
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they believe dorner died. >> while we were still compiling the information, and putting our reports together, the information that we have right now seems to indicate that the wound that took christopher dorner's life was self inflicted. >> dorner is now dead, but with so many questions left unanswered, dorner's supporters hope the investigation into his allegations of police abuse and corruption don't dia long with him. don? >> nick, thank you very much. fifth graders are accused of plotting to murder a girl in their class, and police say the two boys were armed with a stolen gun. how the alleged plot was thwarted, coming up. the bar harbor bake is really worth trying. [ male announcer ] get more during red lobster's lobsterfest. with the year's largest selection of mouth-watering lobster entrees. like our delicious lobster lover's dream, featuring two kinds of succulent lobster tails. or our savory, new grilled maine lobster and lobster tacos. it's back, but not for long. [ woman ] our guests go crazy for lobsterfest.
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my favorite entree is the lobster lover's dream. what's yours? come celebrate lobsterfest and sea food differently. a regular guy with an irregular heartbeat. the usual, bob? not today. [ male announcer ] bob has afib: atrial fibrillation not caused by a heart valve problem, a condition that puts him at greater risk for a stroke. [ gps ] turn left. i don't think so. [ male announcer ] for years, bob took warfarin, and made a monthly trip to the clinic to get his blood tested. but not anymore. bob's doctor recommended a different option: once-a-day xarelto®. xarelto® is the first and only once-a-day prescription blood thinner for patients with afib not caused by a heart valve problem, that doesn't require routine blood monitoring. like warfarin, xarelto® is proven effective to reduce the risk of an afib-related stroke. there is limited data on how these drugs compare when warfarin is well managed. no routine blood monitoring means bob can spend his extra time however he likes. new zealand!
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call 1-888-xarelto or visit goxarelto.com. one firefighter is dead and three others in burn units today. it happened in bryant, texas, late last night when a knights of columbus hall was engulfed in flames. nobody was in the building when firefighters responded. they're investigating what caused that fire, of course. i want you to watch this now. that was a dramatic end to a high-speed chase in indianola, iowa friday night. police say the car was going 130 miles per hour when it t-boned the empty cruiser. the driver was killed, but incredibly, a little boy in the mangled car did survive. he's being treated for injuries. police say they did not know a child was in the car until after
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that crash. a black nurse says she was banned from caring for a newborn child because of her skin color. tanya battle is suing the michigan hospital where she has worked for 25 years. according to the nurse, the baby's father said he it not want african-americans involved with his baby's care. her lawsuit claims this note was on the baby's medical chart. it reads, please, no african-american nurses to care for baby, per dad's request. her attorneys described the nurse's reaction. >> it was shocking to her. she was very upset. she was very offended. she was in disbelief. >> the hospital has not commented to cnn. we'll follow up. two fifth grade boys armed with a knife and a stolen gun are accused of plotting to kill a girl in their class. two fifth grade boys. the boys told police, the girl was rude, and she was annoying. the plot crumbled with when another student ratted them out. parents are shocked.
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>> i've got a son here. and i was a little freaked out. so i didn't know what to do. >> this is my first year having her in a public school. i've home-schooled until then. it was scary for me, but i thought they handled it very well. >> i'm going to bring in defense attorney holly hughes. holly, we're talking about, what, two boys, 10 and 11. 10 and 11 years old. >> yes. >> how does the judicial system there deal with it? how will the courts deal with them? >> in the state of washington, a child under 8 is presumed not capable of committing a crime. the same presumption holds if you're between 8 and 12. however, the state can overcome that presumption by having what they call a capacity hearing. that has to be held within 14 days under washington state law of the child's first appearance in court. so they're going to have this capacity hearing, and they're going to determine if the child could understand that his actions were wrong and the nature of the actions. and they've got some really good evidence. it's very chilling to listen to the statements of these two young boys. not only did they show no remorse when talking about it, they had planned this out to the
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t. the older boy, the 11-year-old, was going to lowure the girl aw and stab her while the 10-year-old stood watch with a fully loaded gun to hold off anybody who came to rescue her if they heard her screaming. they had a list of six other students that they intended to also injury, because they found them annoying. and when the police were driving these two young boys back into the police station, the one was saying if i find out who told them about our weapons, i'll kill them too. i don't care how long they put me in jail. when i get out, i'll kill them. all of these statements will be used in the capacity hearing. >> speaking of the weapon, the gun, one boy stole the gun from his older brother. so when a fifth grader gets hold of a gun, who is responsible here? the parents? can the parents be arrested? >> no, the parents cannot be arrested. not for this. they might be -- let me rephrase that. they could be charged, possibly, with neglect. but it all depends on the circumstances. you know, did they even know the older brother had a gun?
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was it locked? i mean, these boys, even for their young age, seemed to be very smart, very cunning, very manipulative, able to plan this out. to the point where they were thinking about holding off first responders with a weapon. they also had a 3 1/2 inch knife they planned to stab the little girl with. they planned it out very well. >> where do you get that at 10 and 11? i don't understand it. >> that's a fantastic question. talk to dr. wendy about that one. >> as this plays out. we'll switch gears and talk about the former mayor of san diego, maureen o'connor, gambled away $1 billion she stole from her dead husband's charity to fuel her gambling habit. how did she get -- she got a sweetheart deal, no jail time. >> right. she was actually very ill and had had a brain tumor and in removing that tumor and trading her, her attorneys and her doctors got together and were able to make the argument to the federal authorities that because the brain tumor was pressing on her brain in a certain area, it was suppressing her ability to
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exercise good judgment, to exercise impulse control, which ordinarily she would have had. this is a woman who has a long service record, service to the community, being a good mayor, being involved. so what she did was, they put forth all her medicals, talked to them, said, look, you know, we will let you repay this money, because she stole it from a charity. her husband's charity after he passed away. and they want the money repaid. so they're looking at all the alternatives here. if they incarcerate her, nobody gets paid back. at least if she is out and functioning now that the brain tumor has been treated, removed, she can earn money. she can pay back, try to make it right. >> she started gambling i think a decade before the brain tumor was diagnosed. >> right. >> and then you said there are cases where people -- >> there are actually documented cases where a brain tumor has caused someone to engage -- the case i'm thinking of specifically was a female teacher started having sex with her students. once the brain tumor was removed, they hooked her up to the machine, showed her images that would ordinarily cause a pedophile to respond.
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no response whatsoever. so it can affect impulse control. >> wondering where she gets $1 billion. her husband was the founder of jack in the box. >> exactly right. and it came from that charity. he funded the charity and said you can't financially profit personally. but you can be a trustee and do good for others. >> thank you, holly. appreciate it. >> always. who is the best nba player of all-time? michael jordan, lebron james? or who is it? our rachel nichols caught up with king james to get his answer. the exclusive interview is next. [ woman ] ring. ring. progresso.
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i just served my mother-in-law your chicken noodle soup but she loved it so much... i told her it was homemade. everyone tells a little white lie now and then. but now she wants my recipe [ clears his throat ] [ softly ] she's right behind me isn't she? [ male announcer ] progresso. you gotta taste this soup. [ male announcer ] when you wear dentures you may not know it, but your mouth is under attack. food particles infiltrate and bacteria proliferate. ♪ protect your mouth, with fixodent. the adhesive helps create a food seal defense for a clean mouth and kills bacteria for fresh breath. ♪ fixodent, and forget it.
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multi . the nba's best players are gathered in houston this weekend for the annual all-star game. it also happens to be the 50th birthday of the great michael jordan, which has sparked a lot of discussion and debate about who is the greatest of all time? is it michael jordan?
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lebron james? who is it? >> dwayne wade said that after one of these games, the last week or two, and said who are you right now. >> he did, he did, he said who are you? i said i'm your best friend, he said you're from another planet. >> most of us don't know what it is like, to have that kind of accuracy, can you compare it to regular life so that most of us can know what it feels like, looking at the basket? >> well, the way i've been shooting the ball, just feels like you're on the beach, you have a tennis ball, no matter what shot you take, it will go in -- you know, i haven't shot 100% yet. >> but you want to.
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you were close one night. >> yeah, i was close, i missed the layup, i missed the layup. >> and that bothers you. >> during the game i didn't know, but i said 13 or 14 -- layup. >> you tweeted this year, i'm not mj, i'm lj. how sick are you of being compared to michael jordan? >> you know it is not a sick thing. mike is mike, a man has to be himself. i don't want to be mike, i am who i am. >> everybody is so focused on your basketball right now, but there are all of these other parts of your personality that we're seeing, whether it is you playing catch with the fan the other night. or you tackling the guy out there, making the half court shot. or we actually saw you joking around with your family in the commercial. or you have a cartoon series. >> a lot of people think it is kind of like staged, it is just -- i don't know, it happens, me, the instance with
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the fan, the basketball, i don't know, i went over there and said hey, give me the ball. he threw it to me light, i said give me a better pass than that. >> and we have talked over the years, you said i have more fun i play better basketball. there is a relationship. >> it is. >> well, you're playing the best basketball of your life arguably, is this the most fun? >> it is, you know, it is hard to find that balance. and i'm happy that i am at the point in my career where i found the balance. and you know, i'm back to having fun and loving the game i have always loved. >> make sure you catch lebron james and our coverage begins at 5:00 eastern, 8-tip off. the harlem dance craze has affected the nation. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> coming up, cnn of course, we get in on the action. it's lots of things. all waking up.
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♪ becoming part of the global phenomenon we call the internet of everything. ♪ trees will talk to networks will talk to scientists about climate change. cars will talk to road sensors will talk to stoplights about traffic efficiency. the ambulance will talk to patient records will talk to doctors about saving lives. it's going to be amazing. and exciting. and maybe, most remarkably, not that far away. the next big thing? we're going to wake the world up. ♪ and watch, with eyes wide, as it gets to work. ♪ cisco. tomorrow starts here.
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cisco. do you guys ride? well... no. sometimes, yeah. yes.
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well, if you know anybody else who also rides, send them here -- we got great coverage. it's not like bikers love their bikes more than life itself. i doubt anyone will even notice. leading the pack in motorcycle insurance. now, that's progressive. call or click today. aarrggh! the harlem shake viral video has people dancing and posting it on line, here are a few of the incidents, starting with this georgia swim team. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ ♪ and do the harlem shake ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ and do the harlem shake ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> a quick explainer for you, for the surprised, unhip, or dedicated dorks, it starts with one person dancing alone, then when the base drops everybody bursts into spastic dance moves, flailing around, they decided to have a little fun with it. watch this. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪

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